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flicky1991 wrote:Dr Diaphanous looks nothing like the handsome bearded man in the videos - he is a hulking monster covered in the body parts of the people he's absorbed. I can see the faces of freezeblade and Darvince staring at me from under the monster's own face.
flicky1991 wrote:Dr Diaphanous looks nothing like the handsome bearded man in the videos - he is a hulking monster covered in the body parts of the people he's absorbed. I can see the faces of freezeblade and Darvince staring at me from under the monster's own face.
Dr. Diaphanous wrote:Guinea pigs are one of the only species that can't synthesize vitamin C (along with capybaras, certain birds and fish, and most primates and bats). All other species (AFAIK) can synthesize it.
You sure about that last part? My understanding was that variation *plummeted* a lot of places when agriculture started, but was fairly high before that.Angua wrote:Most agricultural communities back in the day lived mainly off whatever their staple food was - varied diets are a pretty recent thing.
My point was that they didn't all die off immediately, and weren't even that unhealthy. Though it's hard to tell what diets were like, but not all diets at that varied - the inuit diet doesn't look very varied by the standards wanted in this thread (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_diet).gmalivuk wrote:You sure about that last part? My understanding was that variation *plummeted* a lot of places when agriculture started, but was fairly high before that.Angua wrote:Most agricultural communities back in the day lived mainly off whatever their staple food was - varied diets are a pretty recent thing.
Dr. Diaphanous wrote:(I know that I'm wrong in this argument - humans can't make vitamins. But I don't think I have heard a convincing argument why I am wrong.)
SpringLoaded12 wrote:You're like a modern-day Holden Caulfield, except that no one would read a book about you.
Really? Seals, whales, fish, deer, bear, oxen, poultry, eggs, grasses, roots, berries, and seaweed isn't varied?Angua wrote:gmalivuk wrote:Angua wrote:the inuit diet doesn't look very varied by the standards wanted in this thread (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_diet).
Doesn't that sound like mainly meat to you? Cows were classed as just eating grass, when they generally get different types of grass, as well as other plants (I don't know if people feed them extra things in their feed or not). Penguins were 'just fish' but they still eat different types of fish. Unless you count all omnivores as necessarily needing a 'varied diet'.gmalivuk wrote:Really? Seals, whales, fish, deer, bear, oxen, poultry, eggs, grasses, roots, berries, and seaweed isn't varied?Angua wrote:gmalivuk wrote:Angua wrote:the inuit diet doesn't look very varied by the standards wanted in this thread (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_diet).
Izawwlgood wrote:I'm curious now if most predators that rely on a singular source of food (say, polar bears on seals) also eat the entire animal, or focus on specific organs if they're particularly deprived. I remember in My Side of the Mountain (totally scientific source) a sequence where he's ravenous and feeling sick, and he catches a rabbit and for some reason the rabbits liver looks like the most delicious thing in the world to him, and he eats it without even cooking it. Later, he finds out that liver is rich in vitamin 'whatever he lacked'. D? Anyway.
mercutio_stencil wrote:This was from a zookeeper, who was explaining why the predators were fed sausages made from whole ground antelope, rather than the usual ground meat.
Still, penguins eat many kinds of fish. Inuit eat many kinds of fish, as well as many kinds of aquatic and terrestrial mammals, as well as many kinds of birds (and their eggs), as well as a variety of fruits and (marine and terrestrial) vegetables.Angua wrote:Doesn't that sound like mainly meat to you? Cows were classed as just eating grass, when they generally get different types of grass, as well as other plants (I don't know if people feed them extra things in their feed or not). Penguins were 'just fish' but they still eat different types of fish. Unless you count all omnivores as necessarily needing a 'varied diet'.
Copper Bezel wrote:That's a tautology. They're only "vital" because we can't synthesize them. If we depended on the same nutrient but could synthesize it, we wouldn't have to consider it a vitamin in humans.
Qaanol wrote:As is the answer to every single “why” question in evolution, the answer is simply, “Because all the other ones died, or their descendants are considered to be different species now.”
Dr. Diaphanous wrote:Why did natural selection not kill all the lineages where [ability to synthesize all vitamins] was lost?
Copper Bezel wrote:evolution works on organisms within their niches
flicky1991 wrote:Dr Diaphanous looks nothing like the handsome bearded man in the videos - he is a hulking monster covered in the body parts of the people he's absorbed. I can see the faces of freezeblade and Darvince staring at me from under the monster's own face.
Dr. Diaphanous wrote:But humans didn't stick to theirs. They migrated out of Africa and around the world, where they came across many different environments, all lacking the food types they were used to.
SpringLoaded12 wrote:You're like a modern-day Holden Caulfield, except that no one would read a book about you.
gmalivuk wrote:But still, the main issue seems to be how much of the animal is eaten. Mongols might eat almost exclusively horse-derived things, but eating *everything* you can make from horse milk along with every part of the horse is extremely different from subsisting entirely on horsemeat.
Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
Dr. Diaphanous wrote:Well yes, we can synthesize 12 of the 20 amino acids from each other. But that doesn't explain why we lost the ability to make the other 8.
iChef wrote:Once thing the Chinese have a knack for is edible items that will "make you strong" which basically translates into giving you a huge strutting erection.
Dr. Diaphanous wrote:At some point, out ancestors made all the amino acids/vitamins/etc they needed from carbon dioxide and ammonia and a few other components, or from other amino acids/vitamins. Why did natural selection not kill all the lineages where this was lost?
chenille wrote:Dr. Diaphanous wrote:At some point, out ancestors made all the amino acids/vitamins/etc they needed from carbon dioxide and ammonia and a few other components, or from other amino acids/vitamins. Why did natural selection not kill all the lineages where this was lost?
Or here's another way to look at it: it didn't at first because the nutrients were available in the environment. Creatures that could not make vitamin C were able to survive fine, and by chance people developed from them. Later on, once people moved to other environments or reached populations where they were not so plentiful, it did start killing some off, but not enough to wipe out the line because of other advantages it picked up. So to this day, people may be afflicted by scurvy, but it has not stopped our species from spreading. It is much too late to recover our ability to synthesize vitamin C, but that handicap is not fatal to the population as a whole.
In 1957, the American J.J. Burns showed that the reason some mammals are susceptible to scurvy is the inability of their liver to produce the active enzyme L-gulonolactone oxidase, which is the last of the chain of four enzymes that synthesize vitamin C.[185][186]
In 2008, researchers at the University of Montpellier discovered that, in humans and other primates, the red blood cells have evolved a mechanism to more efficiently utilize the vitamin C present in the body by recycling oxidized L-dehydroascorbic acid (DHA) back into ascorbic acid, which can be reused by the body. The mechanism was not found to be present in mammals that synthesize their own vitamin C.[14]
flicky1991 wrote:Dr Diaphanous looks nothing like the handsome bearded man in the videos - he is a hulking monster covered in the body parts of the people he's absorbed. I can see the faces of freezeblade and Darvince staring at me from under the monster's own face.
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